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  • Our audience, like the rest of America, loves apple pie — we're traditionalists. But in growing numbers, Americans are branching out to chocolate; key lime and cherry.
  • SAVE THE LAGOON - TOWN HALL METING by Preserve Brevard, Inc. This educational event is being held when the early voting opens for the November 8, 2016…
  • Written by Team SCPA It's time to discuss the most important issue facing the democratic primary and the upcoming election: Healthcare. In the United…
  • The Cocoa Village Playhouse's Stars of Tomorrow will present a special performance of James and the Giant Peach for sensory sensitive audiences on…
  • Breaking Down Walls: Panel DiscussionSunday, May 21, 2017This Breaking Down Walls event will focus on acquiring knowledge about different religions as…
  • Bach’s Easter Oratorio is considerably shorter than some of his similar works, and it’s also considerably less familiar.On this Sunday’s program, we’ll have a performance of this curious work that combines some of Bach’s most festive music with episodes of pathos that seem contradictory at first glance, but maybe not so much on reflection.
  • English composer Frederick Delius’s story is far from unique. He wanted to devote his life to music; his father wanted him to pursue the family business. It didn’t make a businessman out of him, but it did giive hm the material to write a Florida Suite, and we’ll hear it on this week’s program.
  • Fifteen years after the president’s trip, minimalist composer John Adams’s opera Nixon in China looked back upon the events of 1972, and we’ll hear what what he was able to capture about the spirit of that week in February on this Sunday’s program.
  • American composer William Bolcom devoted 25 years to setting William Blake’s Songs of Innocence and Experience as a song cycle, which required the musical resources of the University of Michigan to perform, and will require nearly an entire program of Mozart’s Attic to present.
  • In 1723, J.S. Bach, the newly-hired Kappelmeister at St. Thomas’s in Leipzig had an early opportunity to show his stuff with a setting of the Magnificat. Bach brought in the trumpets and the kettle drums for a festive spectacular performance, and we’ll hear what must have made an impression on the staid Burgomeisters with a festive performance of our own this Sunday.
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